THE 11ED CLOUD CHIEF, 1TODAY. m 4, IMPS. 3 & i i'l 41 v fc $1 H i.rvA.xVitufeiwit THE PIECE THAT WAS LOST, 9Tt " W It wns a midsummer morning. Tho gram was waiting for the scythe, lint aflrr breakfast Silas Rogom took down Mm old bible that had been his moth cr'H dully companion for over eighty ycnra, mill Ihoy Bat reverently down to worship, The reading was thai ten dor lesson of Hit wandering sheep, and the lost piece of silver, and ended with the heavenly rejoicing "over the sin ner that repenteth." nnd after the enrn est, though homely prayer, they wen ready for work. Aimer, the hired man, and Reuben, the hoy. an they started out of the house, ulinnal stumbled over a woman sitting in the doorway, ab sorbed In thought. Hllas looked at her but did not stay to question her. And when they weie pine, she rose abruptly and said, "Will you give mo romo breakfast?" Mrs. Rogers looked at her. She was a tall and not uncomely woman of about thirty, but with something Iti dollnably evil about her face. The hard mouth, the bold, defiant e.vcs. repelled her, yet It seemed as If at any Instant they might bieak Into scninful tmw, "Who a:e you?" asked the goed wife iiimliiK neater, with u pan of hie.ul In her hand. Again the face darkened and lightened, grew hard anil yleld Iiik. with the sudden declaration, "I am the piece that was lo.it." Martha Rogers had not a particle of poetry In her nature, but she had the mo!t profound rovnciice for Hie Scrip ture, therefore the words both puzzled and shocked her. Hut she was not the woman to refuse bread to the hungry ; so she placed food upon the table, anil motioned the woman to a chair, say ing, "Set up and eat." All the time that the woman was eat ingand she did not hasten her eyes followed the in ltd less and Hetty, the bright joiing daughter, until Martha Rogers grew nervous and sent Hetty to "red ui tho chambers." "Will you give mo work to do?" she demanded rather than asked. "Who aie you?" asked Mrs. Rogers again, simply to gain time. "I thought ou knew-. I am Moll Prltchard; they have turned me out of iny houc, burned It over my head " 'Hid her eyes grew lurid. "What can you do?" nuked Mw. Rogers. "Anything that a woman can do, or a man. I can work in the Held with the best of them; I have done It many a time; but I bhould like to do u hut to lie like other women." "Are on a good woman?" The question came straight nu-1 strong, without an faltering. She had heard of thin Moll Piltihurd, a woman who lived alone In a tumble down but below tho sawmill, and won a meager living by weaving rag carpets, picking berries for sale, and. It was suspected In less reputable ways; but Martha Ho gcrs took no slock In Idle rumors. If she had not the divine compassion, she had something like divine Justice, which Is altogether a nweeter thing In its remembering of our frame "than the tender mercies of the wicked." Tho woman lookcdat her curiously at first with a mocking smile, then with n sullen, nnd at last with a defiant expression. "I AM THK PIECE THAT WAS LOST." "la It likely?" she said tlercely. "A good woman! How should 1 he a good woman? 1 tell you, I'm the pleeo that was lost, and nobody ever looked for nte. If 1 was a good womnii, do you suppose I should be whuro I be only 2S yearn old, well and hearty, mid every door In the world shut In my face? I tell you tho man who wrote that story didn't know women; they don't hunt for tho pleeo that's losi, they Just let It go. There's enough of them nnd don't got lost." Poor Martha Rogers was sorely per plexed, all tho more that her way had lain so smooth nnd plnln before her that she. might have walked Into It blindly. If sho was a lost piece of silver, It was not she who lost It; bin what If It wero the Maater's, precious to his heart, and a careless hand dropped It and left It to Uo In tho dust? And what If ho bade her to seok It, and ilnd It for him? Should sho daro re fuse? On this very day, when sho puoded so surely the help which she had so looked for in vu1n, hud not this woman been sent to her very door, and was It not n plain lending of Prov idence? It la a blessed thing for us that we nro usually driven to act first and theorlzo afterward, oven though the after-thought sometimes brings re pentance. Tho bread was rendy for tho oven and tho woodhox empty, "You may fotch In some wood," said Martha Rogers, and tho woman promptly obeyed, filling tho box with one load of her sinewy arms, and then stood humbly waiting. Hetty came In to tho kitchen and began to clear the table, but her mother aajd, "Go upstairs and fetch a big apron and ono of our sewing caps, and bee If you can finish up your dress." Away went Hetty, nor light heart 1 . . i ML w-- lUKfljf ft ft fJJS wM w: ill bounding with the unexpected release; e mother turned again to tho furnished btr with a (naive towel, and sent her to the wash house for a thorough puilllcntlon. Half an hour afterward, with her hair hidden In the muslin cap. her whole tlguie en veloped In the calico apion, a comely woman was silently engaged in house hold tasks, doing her work with such rapidity nnd skill that the housewife drew a nigh of lellef. "There's a handful of towels and eoaise clothes left from the Ironing, you might put the lions on, Mary, and miiooiIi 'cm out." The woman tumid a startled face upon her, and then went (illicitly for the clothes; hut something- was It a tear?--rolled down bet swaithy cheeks, mingling with the bright drop.i she sprinkled over them. When hud she ever heard anything hut Moll? Not since among New' llampshlie bills a pale woman had lain her hands upon (he tangled curlri of her little tlaugh ter and piuyed that some one would watch over these wtivward feet, lest tliey should go astray. It made Moll shudder to think (,f t. What did she know about Joy in heaven over one sinner and repenteth? Slim Rogers llslriud to the day's story as be sat mending a bit of har ness with clumsy lingers, and among his other thought he grasped the idea that his wife had seemed a valuable and much-needed helper. "It scouts a risk to run," said Mar tha, anxiously, "and I don't know but It's prestinituoua; them's Hetty and tlwre'H Reuben --" "And thete'H the Lord," said Silas, stopping to open his knife. "Yes.' halt! Martha, with a little htart, "and I quite can't get rid of what she said abuut tho 'piece that was lost,' though, to be sine, the woman that lost It ought to hunt It." "She never does; folks are always losing things for .somebody else to find; 'taint many of them can say. 'Those that thou hast given me I have kept,' right straight along." "Hut If you lose your own piece look ing after other folk's " "Well, theto's the rinks, as you say, but I'd rather take a risk for the Lord than agin him." Martha Itogers took the ilsk for the Lord, and he abundantly Justified and r warded her faith. For the piece that was lost becomes "my piece" to the heart that lluds It again In the Mas it rs hand; and locking the "lory ef the wanderer in her own breast. It was only to the angels that she said, "He Job e wlh me." Anil when yeais afterward the wom an herself said before the committee oT the church, "I am the woman ovoi whom there Is a gie.it Joy In heaven," there was not wanting those who thought she was presumptuously claim ing to he a saint. Emily Huntington Miller. A (iiinil AihrrtUIni; Vti-illiini, A glance In an Atlanta book Htoro yesterday made this striking truth stand forth: Death Is sometimes a big advertise ment. In uo department of human effort do men put forth such terrific energy as lu their attempts to catch the public eye. Men nick their brain for Ingenl otiri schemes to attract public attention. The good advertiser is the rarest and richest of successes. Hut some times all the cleverness and Ingenuity of these brain workers tire beaten--and unexpectedly. mi ..Manners iieatn last week was an advertisement for Harper Hrnn. which no Idea they might dig out of their brains could excel. It has started a great rush after last mouth's Har per's, which contained tho first Install ment of "The Martian," Du Maurler's now story, and a third edition of the number Is now being fast exhausted. Those who cannot Ilnd the magazine are Inventing in "Peter lbbetson," and If there happen to be any who have not read "Trilby" they Invest in that. The book dealers will tell you that In the past four days there has been a won derful demand for Du Mnurler's works. This great author who has added thousands to the coffers of the Har pers by his life. Is adding thousands to their profits by the mere fnct of his death. Atlanta Constitution. The Spirit or Alnilrrn A I Im-iih. Modern Athens, which recalls In so many ways the Athens of ancient days, has Inherited from her the privilege of being beautiful and enriched by her children. The public treasury was not alwn.va very well filled in those times any more than in tho present, but wealthy citizens who had made for tunes at a distance liked to crown thel" commercial career by some act of lib erality to the mother country. They endowed the land with superb edifices of general utility theaters, gymna sia, temples. Tho modern city Is like wise full of monuments which she owes to such generosity. It was easy to ob tain from private Individuals what the stato could not give. The Olympic games had burned with ho bright a lus ter In the past of the Greeks that they could not but have their revival at heart. "Tho Olympic- Clnmes of 1896," by naron Pierre de Caubertlu, In the Century. A sure sikh, "I saw Muggins on his front porch this overling smoking n cigar; It must bo that Ills wlfo is away." "What makes you think so?" "Why, when she'e at home ho smokca a brier-root plpo and tries to look eoo- nomlcal." Iluffnlo Kxpress. Row Johu Wler, after nine years of coutlnuoua labor in Japan, ia soon to return with hia family to this country. V POPULARITY OF SARATOGA. AMr.it lion nf ViiiitIcmii Wult-rliii; I'liu'fl NmiK In l.mitltiii I'lipcr. JJaiatoga Springs will always bo pop ular. You have here the best of Anier kun society, less exclusive than Now port or Lenox, less mixed than l)tig Hrancb and .Manhattan Heach and vast ly more representative than either, says a letter In the London Telegraph. This Is mainly due, perhaps, to the cnprniou.'! hotels, wKh their huge verandas or piazzas In front nnd vast garden court- ni ds In the rear which Is Oie special Icatuie of Saratoga. TIhmp gigantic struetiiies are among flic biggest hos tel! les In tho world. Two of the larg est ptovide something like 2,000 beds each and their lofty and, spacious halls, drawing, dining and reception rooms are all on a scale of corresponding magnitude. Hero all classes melt and blend. Hound the Inclosed garden couits aie hullt tiers of elegant apart merits, each with Its veranda, while every set of rooms on the same Hoot Is technically a cottage. .lullan Haw thorne hays a walk round the circuit of these verandas takes long enough for a young man and woman to becpnir arqtinliited, to get engaged and bieak It off again. This estimate Is so doll nlte that I hesitate almost to repeat the cinder statement (hat one of thr courtyards measures seven acres. It l marvelous, however, how attractive thr Irclosuus of these two great hotels aie In the hottest afternoons the branch ing elms and the sugar maples throw their shadows across the green sward and, lu the cool, delicious evenings when the hands are playing, the foitu talus Mowing and ladies lu gauzy toil ettes promenading, the scene Is charm lug. Ilesldcs Its agreeable- society, lei me say that Saratoga has many uatura attractions. From New York you ap proach it as far as Albany by the Hud son- the Rhine of America. 1'p thlt river the blue tidal watets of the At lantlc How as far as I'oiighkeepsle. Or both shirs of the stream the banki tire lofty and well wooded, and all th( wiy along aie dotted with villages auc country residences standing lu pictur esque Inelosures. sloping down very of ten to the water's edge. On the north ern side of Saratoga are Lakes (leorgt ami Chninplaln, two of the pretticsl of transatlantic Inland waters. In former das also the village, like Tun-bildge-uells. owed Its reputaMon to the springs. There are any number of thein. They come bubbling up from great depths, charged with carbonic acid, sodium, potassium, lithium and calcium lu varied coiiifiluatioiis. Theie was a time when people came here to repair shattered constitutions by drink ing tit the geysers, or Washington ppilng, or the Saiatoga Vichy or Carls bail. A I'ri'illi-tliiii Admit liillui.s. The following prediction, made by the Royal College of Physicians of Ha varla In ISo.'i, Is now on record in the archives of the Nitieinberg and Furth Hallway. In that country. When It was proposed to build this line, the phy sicians of the country met and for mally protested agiilnst it. "Loronu tion, by the aid of any kind of steam machines whatever," the liavnrian physicians declared, "should be pro hibited in the Interest of the public health. The rapid movements cannot fall to produce In the passengers tho mental ailment called delirium furios um. Even admitting," the protest went on. "that travelers will consent to run the risk, the state can do uo less than protect the bystanders. The sight alone of a locomotive passing at full speed sutllces to produce this frightful malady of the brain. It Is, at any rate, India pcnsahlt! that a barrier at least six feet high, should be erected on buil sides of tho track." I'mili "f I.IkIiIiiIiii;, All the doors In .John Kipp's house at Cedar Hayou, Harris County, Toxas, wero opened and a lid of tlte kitchen rango wns blown off by a bolt of lightning. MISSIONS. Tho annual report of the Moravian church gives ir0 mission stations, 400 missionaries and Olt.OOO converts In heathen lauds. Tho native Christians In heathon Innds last year gavo $rriO,000, more than one-ninth the amount raised In tho United States. The last of the heathen on Kfale Island arc being gathered Into tho church as the result of twenty-threo years' faithful labor. One hundred and fifty Chinese con veits weie baptized during tho last twenty months by Rev. Hopkin Rees at Tientsin, north China. As tho American H.iptlst Homo MIs hloa society Is heavily burdened with debt, tho board of managers of that society, nt a meeting held Sept. 14, de cided to make no appropriations for missionaries salaries for the present for a period extending beyond Dec. Ill, 1SUG, unless the current receipts mean tlmo shall bo vry considerably lr creased. Tho vast possibilities open to an In dividual society of Christian Kndeavor nro shown In a report that comes from Geolong, Australia. The Yarra Street Wesleyan society, which contains five divisions nnd 550 members, has organ ized a boys' club, a men'a club, a birth day league for missionary purpnsea and u Sunday school home department. During tho year It hold 20S cottago prayer meetings, besides soventy-elght open nlr services; 1,251 visits wore paid arid 12.4S8 loaves of bread distributed. The Juniors provided an outing for ona hundred slum children, distributed 150 bouquets of (lowers and mado more thnn COO vlalta. Tho other labors of tho society wero on a proportionate, aenle. -9' r t' 4f. ! -IL 4 -If t t- i 9 A -I- ! " i - i T t Beauty and A South American puma lion, tho fiercest animal of that half of the hem isphere. Is the pet of little Miss Kthol Curzon, the L'-year-old (laughter of Captain Henry I'. Cttizon, late of Her Majesty's service. Damon is a line, sleek and nlllten halictl specimen of his tribe. He was bom throe .ve.irs ago among Hie pam pas grans legion of South America that is known locall.v us La Pf.nipa. Ctirzon for years ban been In that country as the representative of an English syndicate. He arrived In Phil adelphia the other day accompanied by his daughter, and the ptiinu came with them, making the long Journey In a cage that was carried In the baggage car. "Damon Is the dealest er'ature next to papa on earth," said Miss Kthel to n repot ter. "He saved my life, and the debt of gratitude I owe 111 in can never be tepald." "Damon la a puma." said the cap tain. "Here In Pennsylvania the early settlers knew his congeners under the MISS CURZON'S namo of panther, 'painter,' or cata mount. In California they call him the cougar, or 'mountain lion." Dur ing tho past decado and a half of years I havo had an abundant opportunlt) to become pretty Intimately acquainted with Sir Puma. Tho longer I know htm tho better I llko him. "Ho has been very unfortunate In his biographers. They give him, It 1ft true, a high character for courago, but, at tho Bamo time, becauso of their ig- nornnco of his true nature.they Impute to him a cowardly fear of man that ho la very far from possessing. Ho will not, ns a rule, defend himself against man, nnd tho gauchos of tho pampas, understanding and appreciat ing tho mysterious gentle instinct or this ungentlo beast; call him 'arnjego del ehrlstlano.' "Damon was full gTovvn when wo first became acquainted with him. Ho was never captured, and, except when wo are traveling, is never restrained cf his liberty. I am on my way hack to my old homo In England primarily to visit my aged parents nnd Incidentally to place my daughter at school. When I return to South America I shall leavo Damon behind, for It would ! oruelty to both to soparnte htm from Ethel "Tor the past five years uinco trto death of my dear wlfo wo havo been living at a place called Snladlllo, where I had an estancla. My daughter has ieen raised to an nctlvo, eut-door llfo, ' f 4t S vl .1- !' .1. t ! i l $jl . ) ilJ ifl .. -. .. :( -T ,T . .. the Beast, t and she rides a horso with all the grace and fearlessness of a gaitcbo. Last fall we bad a grand 'ccrco,' or assembly of ranchmen and hunters, to hunt ostilchiM and other game. The uport Is exciting, hut far from danger ous, nnd ICthel was one of the party. The litiutets, numbering about thirty, spread themselves loitnd in a vttst ring, and, advancing toward tho center, drove the animals before them. "During the excitement of the chase which followed, while we wero all en gaged In preventing the ostriches, deer, etc., from doubling back and escaping, I noticed that my daughter had disap peared. Her ab.-ence did not alarm me at the time, for I thought she had be come tiled and gone back to the estau cla. I was in ally frantic when, late nt night, 1 reached home and found that I'thel's pony had come galloping home early In the afternoon without its rider. I Heading the worst I imme diately got togdher a band of gauchos and we started out to hc.irch for my darling. TAME PUMA LION. "Eventunlly ono of the gauchos found Ethel In u bunch of scrub, lying on tho ground with a broken leg. Her pony, early In the hunt, had stepped Into nn 'oculto' hole and thrown Its rider, nelng nnnhlo to move because of her fractured limb, Ethel had shout ed for assistance, but lior voice was drowned by tho yells of excited hunters and the hope of rescue vanished. Sho Is a brave girl, and, knowing that a search would be made for her as coon as her absence was discovered, sho mado herself ns comfortftblo as possible and awaited tho arrlvnl of help. "Ab night nppronched, nnd no ono came, sho began to oxporlenco genuine alarm, and when, about an hour beforo dark, a pumn now her pet Damon appeared nnd squatted down in the grass close beside her, she gavo herself up for lost. Tho beast, however, did not seem to notice her, nnd her courago revived. Sho remembered that the puma rarely, If ever, molests a human being, and uho begun to hopo that the creature would go nway. "Aftor awhile tho puma became rest lees, frequently going nway and return ing, nnd finally It stayed away so long that alio thought It had left her for good. About midnight alio heard the deep roar of a Jaguar, and abandonod all hopo, for tho South American tiger la man'B deadly foo. "By raising herself on hor elbow, Bho Mil fenBw wns nl'i tc uc tl- 1 iv '-f tl.o Jifjunr crouching mar lu r. but l'j lace was turned from h. :, and It apjir.ued to bo Intently vaU-hlh,'; wne object upon which it vvu.) about to spring. Pres ently It crept out of sight, and there followed a dtep sIHicc, broken sud denly by frightful yells and acre.ims of pain, coupled with the fierce growls and snarls of the puma, and tho sounds of desperate conflict. "The puma and tho Jngunr aro Bwom enemies, anil the two great beasts wero having a battle to the finish. Tho bat tle kmtod for some time, but near morning the puma, sate!) wounded, crept through the grass and crouched down beside my daughter, purring like a cat. The creatine seemed so friend ly that Ethel ventured to stroke his fur with her hand, whereupon tho puma began to play nnd roll about llko a kit ten. When wo rode up tho puma crouched over hor body and began to growl. Several rllles were leveled at the head of the brute, but Ethel begged us not to shoot, and from that day tu this the two havo been inseparable" A FRENCH BABY, l.'i;iil 4 l'tiriimlltlr-i on tin- lllrtli of ii r.in.llile Soliller. The birth of c, now citizen In Krnncc at once gives rise to countleos formali ties and an avalanche of legal sctib bllngs, which would teach him, could ho but understand, that his country Is par excellence the homo of legal cere mony and administration, says the Century. Within tho first twenty-four hours notice of the birth must bo sent to the mayor's office (there Is such nn ofileo In every village lu France), so that tho official physician may call and make the necessary legal statement. I suppose he wnnts to convince himself that the declaration alieady made Is correct, and that the family, when It announced the birth of a girl, wtut not trying to scieen a future soldier from his compulsory service. Then tho father, accompanied by two witnesses, goes to (111 out the birth certificate and gives his child Its legitimate, docu mented position, to which he or she will bo obliged to have recourse In till the great, and frequently lu the minor, clrcuni.nanees of life, from ono end of It to the other. Without It tho child could not enter a school, nor draw lots on entering the army, nor get married, nor be burled. The leat mistake of form would have most serious conse quences; the baptismal names declared must always be placed In tho same, order on all future deeds. These nro usually saints' names. l recall the amusing anger of a young American father of my acquaintance who wished to give his son born lu Paris the name of the great sailor Diiquesne, In re membrance of tho avenue where the baby had seen the light of day, and, lu addition, the family name of one of his friends, which no frenchman could pronounce. All thK seemed so shocking and Incongruous to the regis trar that the certificate was rondo our only after Interminable disciu.dnn. I'lilent ICIkIiI MilmllrH. An exchange says tliut a smooth pat ent right swindling scheme Is being worked in some of tho states. A man comes to a farmer with a patent wagon tongtio for which great claims are made. He has only that ono county left and will sell the right for two hundred anil fifty dollars. A few days later, while the farmer Is thinking over the matter, another man comes along, who hns learned that the farmer has the right to the valuable Invention, and offers him four hundred dollars for It, paying him ten dollars down. The farmer at once goes and closes tho deal with the first party, giving his noto or cash for the two hundred and fifty dol lais. In the meantime tho second man disappears and the two schemers moot and "dlvy." If a note, It Is discounted at the nearest hank. Ills .MMukit. Mr. Footo (tho shoemaker) "Who was It Invented this walking through the grass barefooted?" Mr. Iilock "I believe It was a minister." "Well, he tiocms to have mistaken tho kind of soles ho should try to save." Yonk ers Statesman. STAGE WHISPERS. "Sho can do moro In Ilvo seconds with her eyes than Anthony Comstocic can undo In Ilvo years, gays Jamw G. Huneker of Anna Held, the JatiM sen satlon Imported from Paris. An English comedian siya Ui& only way to successfully spring a Joko on Iliitlsh theater-goers Is to first an nounce that n Joke Is about to bo sprung, then to spring It. and lnstly to explain Hint It lis been sprung. Clement Scott, tho famous London critic, has a non playing In Daly'a com pany In Now York In "Tho Geisha." A son of William Winter nnd a grand son of Tom Hnddaway, tho famous American comedian, are also In tho samo organization. It la probablo that "Tom aroRan,', which Augustus 111 o mas aided Hopkin son Smith in making Into a play, may not bo produced thla season after all. Considerable work haa to bo dono on It to get It Into ahapo, aa tho first draught was far from satisfactory. Boston Is moving in tho abolition of obstructive hats In theatre, Ono man ager sends an uaher to every offending woman, Just before tho rlao of tho cur tain to ask her to removo tho nulaanco, ind In nearly overy caso alio compile vithout ado. Recent London papers havo glvon nuch commendation to a performance iy Mlsd Keith Wakoman. nn Amorlcan ictreas, who wna formerly In L'iwrouc Harretfa company, and who vven; to England aomo time ugo with thkt ot E. S. Willard. .. U MAi(( Mi'vilkJi C iH . j